Saturday, April 30, 2011

Why we have front porches in the Northside

Last Friday was such a wonderful release from the cold and wet of late winter/early spring, Linda and I put out bread and wine and pate and visited with people as they came to pick up bread. We enjoyed it and weather permitting, will repeat it. Feel free to stop and visit if we are enjoying the porch next time you pick up bread.

Next Baking Dates

I will bake bread the first two Fridays of May: May 6th and May 13th.

For May 6th I will bake : multigrain, semolina, rye and baguettes.
For May 13th I will bake: multigrain, olive, pain au levain boules and baguettes.


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Some steps along the way

Once the dough is mixed, it ferments overnight in the fridge in a large tub. The next day, this fully fermented dough is turned out onto the table and scaled--cut into loaf-sized pieces.
In the meantime, my Associate for Logistics, Operations and Moral Support, Linda McGuire, has helped me preheat the oven. This requires a late night firing on Thursday and another early a.m. firing Friday, on bakeday. Most times of the year, these firings are nighttime events.
When the loaves have proofed and are ready to bake, we wheel them outside and load them into the oven.
A load of multigrain, nearly ready to come out of the oven. The oven walls are free of soot: in the firing process, the oven temperature is more than 700 degrees and all soot burns off, leaving white walls and dome.

Semolina loaves just out of the oven.
Part of a days bake, cooling on the table.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Got Bread!


76 loaves today--a big bake.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Fuel for the oven


Much of the wood for the bread oven comes from our land in Davis County. It seems that nearly every year our woodlot gives up a fair size oak or hickory tree. We cut the largest limbs and the trunk into manageable pieces and pick a weekend to split it all. In the process we find the most interesting bugs. This year, for the first time, we found a pseudoscorpion hiding in the bark. It was less than 1/4 inch in size and looked just like a tiny tick with scorpion claws--which is pretty much what a pseudoscorpion is.


Here is a look at part of the wood we cut, split, and stacked, and the crew who lent their hands. And backs.